nmm 22 4500ICPSR00039MiAaIm f a u cr mn mmmmuuuu150802s1984 miu f a eng d(MiAaI)ICPSR00039MiAaIMiAaI
Canadian Census and Election Data, 1908-1968
[electronic resource]
Donald E. Blake
2011-08-11Ann Arbor, Mich.Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor]1984ICPSR39NumericTitle from ICPSR DDI metadata of 2015-08-02.AVAILABLE. This study is freely available to ICPSR member institutions.Also available as downloadable files.
This data collection contains seven files of Canadian
census and election data, each corresponding to a particular
electoral period when the number of constituencies was fixed.
The data files include returns from the federal elections of
1908 and 1911 and data from the 1911 Census (Part 1), the
elections of 1917 and 1921 and the 1921 Census (Part 2), the
elections of 1925, 1926, and 1930 (Part 3), the elections of
1935, 1940, and 1945 (Part 4), the election of 1949 and the
1951 Census (Part 5), the elections of 1957, 1958, 1962, 1963,
and 1965 and the 1961 Census (Part 6), and the election of
1968 (Part 7). The election data include information on the
total valid vote cast and the percentage of the total vote
received by each of the major parties, including the Conservative,
Liberal, Socialist, Labor, Independent, Progressive, CCF, Social
Credit, NDP, and Creditiste parties, as well as a total for all
other parties. The census data provide demographic information on
religion, including Anglican, Baptist, Jewish, Lutheran,
Presbyterian, Roman Catholic, United Church, and other
denominational sects, and ethnic origin, including British,
French, German, Italian, Scandinavian, Russian, Polish, Asiatic,
Native, and others, as well as information on age, education,
occupation, and income from the 1961 Census.
Cf.: http://doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR00039.v2
census dataicpsrelection returnsicpsrelectionsicpsrnational electionsicpsrpolitical attitudesicpsrpolitical partiesicpsrvotersicpsrvoting behavioricpsrIDRC III. Electoral Systems and Political BehaviorICPSR XIV.A.4.b. Mass Political Behavior and Attitudes, Historical and Contemporary Electoral Processes, Merged Electoral and Ecological Data, Nations Other Than the United StatesIDRC VII. Public Opinion DataIDRC VI. Human Dimension of International RelationsBlake, Donald E.Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research.ICPSR (Series)39Access restricted ; authentication may be required:http://doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR00039.v2 nmm 22 4500ICPSR02683MiAaIm f a u cr mn mmmmuuuu150802s1999 miu f a eng d(MiAaI)ICPSR02683MiAaIMiAaI
Comparative Study of Electoral Systems, 1996-2001
[electronic resource]
Virginia Sapiro
,
W. Philips Shively
2004-03-10Ann Arbor, Mich.Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor]1999ICPSR2683NumericTitle from ICPSR DDI metadata of 2015-08-02.AVAILABLE. This study is freely available to ICPSR member institutions.Also available as downloadable files.
This study is the first module of an ongoing collaborative
program of crossnational research among national election studies
designed to advance the understanding of electoral behavior across
polities. The data project, carried out in over 50 consolidated and
emerging democracies, was coordinated by social scientists from around
the world who cooperated to specify the research agenda, the study
design, and the micro- and macro-level data that native teams of
researchers collected within each polity. This collection currently
comprises data from surveys conducted during 1996-2001 in Australia,
Belarus, Belgium, Canada, Chile, Czech Republic, Denmark, Germany,
Great Britain, Hong Kong, Hungary, Iceland, Israel, Japan, Korea,
Lithuania, Mexico, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Peru, Poland,
Portugal, Romania, Russia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland,
Taiwan, Thailand, Ukraine, and the United States. The format includes
a common questionnaire module and background (demographic)
characteristics of respondents, coded to agreed-upon standards. These
data have been merged into a single crossnational dataset with a
companion supplementary weighted data file. Measures included in the
study focus on three main issues. The first topic explored is the
impact of electoral institutions, with questions about parliamentary
versus presidential systems of government (levels of accountability,
responsiveness), the electoral rules on casting/counting of votes
(issues of fairness, impact of voting), and political parties
(identification, ideological distinction). The second major issue
covered is the nature of political and social cleavages and alignments
explored by questions such as left-right issue orientation of
respondents vs. political parties. Lastly, the collection covers the
evaluation of democratic institutions and processes through measures
such as efficacy in political parties, elected officials, and
respondents' satisfaction with democracy. Additionally, data were
collected on voter turnout, voter choice, and respondents' age, sex,
education, employment, and income.
Cf.: http://doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR02683.v4
democracyicpsrdemographic characteristicsicpsrelectoral systemsicpsrnational electionsicpsrnationsicpsrparliamentary electionsicpsrpolitical affiliationicpsrpolitical efficacyicpsrpolitical ideologiesicpsrpolitical partiesicpsrpolitical systemsicpsrpoliticiansicpsrpresidential electionsicpsrpublic opinionicpsrvote counticpsrvoting behavioricpsrIDRC III. Electoral Systems and Political BehaviorICPSR XIV.A.4.b. Mass Political Behavior and Attitudes, Historical and Contemporary Electoral Processes, Merged Electoral and Ecological Data, Nations Other Than the United StatesIDRC VII. Public Opinion DataSapiro, VirginiaShively, W. PhilipsInter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research.ICPSR (Series)2683Access restricted ; authentication may be required:http://doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR02683.v4 nmm 22 4500ICPSR03808MiAaIm f a u cr mn mmmmuuuu150802s2004 miu f a eng d(MiAaI)ICPSR03808MiAaIMiAaI
Comparative Study of Electoral Systems, 2001-2006
[electronic resource]
Virginia Sapiro
,
W. Philips Shively
2008-07-01Ann Arbor, Mich.Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor]2004ICPSR3808NumericTitle from ICPSR DDI metadata of 2015-08-02.AVAILABLE. This study is freely available to ICPSR member institutions.Also available as downloadable files.
This study is the full release of 2001-2006 data from Module 2 of the Comparative Study of Electoral Systems. The Comparative Study of Electoral Systems is an ongoing collaborative program of crossnational research among national election studies designed to advance the understanding of electoral behavior across polities. The project, which is being carried out in over 50 consolidated and emerging democracies, was coordinated by social scientists from around the world who cooperated to specify the research agenda, the study design, and the micro- and macro-level data that native teams of researchers collected within each polity. This collection currently comprises data from surveys conducted in the countries of Albania, Australia, Belgium, Brazil, Bulgaria, Canada, Chile, Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Great Britain, Hong Kong, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Japan, Kyrgyzstan, Mexico, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Peru, Philippines, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Russia, Slovenia, South Korea, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Taiwan, and the United States. Module 2 focuses on electoral institutions and political behavior, particularly on the fundamental principles of democratic governance: representation and accountability. It aims to examine how well different electoral institutions function as mechanisms by which citizens' views are represented in the policymaking process, and by which citizens hold their elected representatives accountable. This is accomplished by explicitly linking individual attitudes and behaviors to the political context across a variety of settings. The module added a new set of items on citizen engagement and cognition across demographic polities, and expanded the analyses of the first module to examine how voters' choices are affected by the institutional context within which those choices are made. The survey results have been compiled and supplemented with district-level information that provides insight into the respondent's political context, and macro-level data that detail the respondent's political system as a whole. At each level of data collection, the measurements used have been standardized to promote comparison. Demographic variables include age, sex, race, ethnicity, education level, marital status, employment status, occupation, household union membership, language, socioeconomic status, political party affiliation, political orientation, religious preference, frequency of religious attendance, household income, number of children and other members of the household, and type of residential area (e.g., urban or rural).
Cf.: http://doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR03808.v2
democracyicpsrpolitical systemsicpsrpoliticiansicpsrparliamentary electionsicpsrpresidential electionsicpsrpublic opinionicpsrvote counticpsrvoting behavioricpsrdemographic characteristicsicpsrelectoral systemsicpsrnational electionsicpsrnationsicpsrpolitical affiliationicpsrpolitical efficacyicpsrpolitical ideologiesicpsrpolitical partiesicpsrICPSR XIV.A.4.b. Mass Political Behavior and Attitudes, Historical and Contemporary Electoral Processes, Merged Electoral and Ecological Data, Nations Other Than the United StatesIDRC VII. Public Opinion DataIDRC III. Electoral Systems and Political BehaviorSapiro, VirginiaShively, W. PhilipsInter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research.ICPSR (Series)3808Access restricted ; authentication may be required:http://doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR03808.v2 nmm 22 4500ICPSR00038MiAaIm f a u cr mn mmmmuuuu150802s1984 miu f a eng d(MiAaI)ICPSR00038MiAaIMiAaI
Data Confrontation Seminar, 1969
[electronic resource] Comparative Socio-Political Data
Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research
2006-01-12Ann Arbor, Mich.Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor]1984ICPSR38NumericTitle from ICPSR DDI metadata of 2015-08-02.AVAILABLE. This study is freely available to ICPSR member institutions.Also available as downloadable files.
Center, Socialist, and Communist parties in the 1958
legislative election. Ecological data include total population, urban
population, sex distribution, occupation, economically active
population, education, literate population, and number of Buddhists,
Christians, Hindus, Jainis, Moslems, Sikhs, and other religious groups.
Part 13 (Norway, Province), and Part 14 (Norway, Commune) consist of the
returns for four national elections in 1949, 1953, 1957, and 1961, and
descriptive data from two national censuses. Data are provided for the
total number of registered voters, valid votes, raw votes cast for the
Communist, Labor, Liberal, Agrarian, Conservative, Christian Peoples
parties, and other parties, and the percentage of total votes cast for
each party. Data are also provided for total population by gender and
age, economically active population, number of church services registered,
and number of communes within each province, as well as percentagized
number of population economically active in select industries, dissenters,
and total population attending church. Part 15 (Norway, Year 1965)
contains returns for national elections in 1961 and 1965 for 466
communes created by administrative reorganization in 1961, and
ecological data from the 1960 census. Data are provided for total votes
cast for the parties, and the number of registered voters. Other
items specify the type of commune, region code, television coverage
code, and politicization, two-day election, and periphery indexes.
Part 16 (Sweden, Constituency) and Part 17 (Sweden, Commune) contain
data for all communes, provinces, and constituencies for Parliamentary
elections in 1948, 1952, 1956, and 1960, and ecological data from two
national censuses for 1950 and 1960. Data are provided for total
electorate, number of votes cast, raw votes, and percentage of votes
cast for the Conservative, Agrarian, Liberal, Social Democratic,
Communist, and other parties. Data are also provided for total
population by gender, population economically active, number of
salaried employees, and wage earners. Part 18 (Denmark, County) and Part
19 (Denmark, Commune) consist of data for all communes and provinces for
the national elections of 1947, 1950, 1953, 1960, 1964, and 1966, and
ecological data from the censuses of 1950 and 1960. Data are provided
for total number of electorates and raw votes for the Social Democratic,
Radical Liberal, Conservative, Liberal, Single-tax, Communist, Danish,
German Minority parties, and other parties. Data are also provided for
total and percentagized population by age and gender, industrially active
population, and urbanization. Part 20 (Netherlands, Municipalities)
consists of data for all municipalities, provinces, and economic-geographic
areas for national elections in 1959 and 1963, and ecological data for
1954 and 1962 for total population and industrially active population
by gender and age, urbanization, occupation, education, and religion.
Part 21 (Poland, Poviats), Part 22 (Poland, Electoral Districts), and
Part 23 (Poland, Voievodships) consist of data for all poviats,
voievodships, and electoral districts for national elections in 1952,
1957, 1961, and 1965, two council elections, and ecological data for
1950, 1960, and 1965. Data are provided for total population by gender
and age distribution, occupation, investments, communication media,
industrially active population, number of dwelling units, farms,
pigs, cattle, physicians, and population growth ratio in urban and
rural areas. Items also specify the number of staff, employees, and
council members in local councils in 1965. See the related collection,
DATA CONFRONTATION SEMINAR, 1969: UNITED STATES DATA (ICPSR 0005).
Cf.: http://doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR00038.v1
administrative divisionsicpsragricultureicpsrcensus dataicpsrcrime ratesicpsrelection returnsicpsrhousingicpsrindustryicpsrlabor forceicpsrnational electionsicpsroccupationsicpsrpolitical partiesicpsrpopulation characteristicsicpsrpopulation migrationicpsrurbanizationicpsrvoter attitudesicpsrICPSR XIV.A.4.b. Mass Political Behavior and Attitudes, Historical and Contemporary Electoral Processes, Merged Electoral and Ecological Data, Nations Other Than the United StatesIDRC VII. Public Opinion DataIDRC VI. Human Dimension of International RelationsIDRC III. Electoral Systems and Political BehaviorInter-university Consortium for Political and Social ResearchInter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research.ICPSR (Series)38Access restricted ; authentication may be required:http://doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR00038.v1 nmm 22 4500ICPSR00042MiAaIm f a u cr mn mmmmuuuu150802s1984 miu f a eng d(MiAaI)ICPSR00042MiAaIMiAaI
German Weimar Republic Data, 1919-1933
[electronic resource]
Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research
2005-12-22Ann Arbor, Mich.Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor]1984ICPSR42NumericTitle from ICPSR DDI metadata of 2015-08-02.AVAILABLE. This study is freely available to ICPSR member institutions.Also available as downloadable files.
This data collection contains electoral and demographic
data at several levels of aggregation (kreis, land/regierungsberzirk,
and wahlkreis) for Germany in the Weimar Republic period of 1919-1933.
Two datasets are available. Part 1, 1919 Data, presents raw and
percentagized election returns at the wahlkreis level for the
1919 election to the Nationalversammlung. Information is provided on
the number and percentage of eligible voters and the total votes cast
for parties such as the German National People's Party, German People's
Party, Christian People's Party, German Democratic Party, Social
Democratic Party, and Independent Social Democratic Party. Part 2,
1920-1933 Data, consists of returns for elections to the Reichstag,
1920-1933, and for the Reichsprasident elections of 1925 and 1932
(including runoff elections in each year), returns for two national
referenda, held in 1926 and 1929, and data pertaining to urban
population, religion, and occupations, taken from the German Census
of 1925. This second dataset contains data at several levels of
aggregation and is a merged file. Crosstemporal discrepancies, such
as changes in the names of the geographical units and the
disappearance of units, have been adjusted for whenever possible.
Variables in this file provide information for the total number
and percentage of eligible voters and votes cast for parties,
including the German Nationalist People's Party, German People's
Party, German Center Party, German Democratic Party, German
Social Democratic Party, German Communist Party, Bavarian People's
Party, Nationalist-Socialist German Workers' Party (Hitler's movement),
German Middle Class Party, German Business and Labor Party,
Conservative People's Party, and other parties. Data are also
provided for the total number and percentage of votes cast in
the Reichsprasident elections of 1925 and 1932 for candidates
Jarres, Held, Ludendorff, Braun, Marx, Hellpach, Thalman, Hitler,
Duesterburg, Von Hindenburg, Winter, and others. Additional
variables provide information on occupations in the country,
including the number of wage earners employed in agriculture,
industry and manufacturing, trade and transportation, civil
service, army and navy, clergy, public health, welfare, domestic
and personal services, and unknown occupations. Other census data
cover the total number of wage earners in the labor force and the
number of female wage earners employed in all occupations. Also
provided is the percentage of the total population living in
towns with 5,000 inhabitants or more, and the number and
percentage of the population who were Protestants, Catholics,
and Jews.
Cf.: http://doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR00042.v1
agricultureicpsrCatholicsicpsrcivil serviceicpsrelection returnsicpsrelectionsicpsrindustryicpsrJewsicpsrlabor forceicpsrmilitaryicpsrnational electionsicpsroccupationsicpsrpolitical partiesicpsrProtestantsicpsrreligionicpsrrunoff electionsicpsrtradeicpsrtransportationicpsrurban populationicpsrvotersicpsrWeimar Republicicpsrworking womenicpsrICPSR XIV.A.4.b. Mass Political Behavior and Attitudes, Historical and Contemporary Electoral Processes, Merged Electoral and Ecological Data, Nations Other Than the United StatesIDRC VI. Human Dimension of International RelationsIDRC III. Electoral Systems and Political BehaviorIDRC VII. Public Opinion DataInter-university Consortium for Political and Social ResearchInter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research.ICPSR (Series)42Access restricted ; authentication may be required:http://doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR00042.v1 nmm 22 4500ICPSR00041MiAaIm f a u cr mn mmmmuuuu150802s1984 miu f a eng d(MiAaI)ICPSR00041MiAaIMiAaI
Norwegian Ecological Data, 1868-1903
[electronic resource]
Frank Aarebrot
,
Stein Kuhnle
2006-01-12Ann Arbor, Mich.Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor]1984ICPSR41NumericTitle from ICPSR DDI metadata of 2015-08-02.AVAILABLE. This study is freely available to ICPSR member institutions.Also available as downloadable files.
This data collection provides economic, social, political,
and demographic information on 431 communes (or electoral parishes)
of Norway in the period 1868-1903. There are four parts to this
collection. Part 1 contains information from the censuses of 1875,
1891, and 1900 and the electoral censuses of 1868 and 1876 on
occupation, income distribution, taxation, age, household, total
population by sex, place of birth, and religious affiliation, and
information about political participation, such as the number of
eligible voters, registered votes, and votes cast in the Storting
(unicameral parliament) elections of 1868, 1870, 1873, 1876, 1879,
1882, 1885, 1888, 1891, 1894, 1897, 1900 and 1903. Part 2
provides information from the educational censuses of 1875
and 1885 on school enrollment, the number of male and
female teachers, and school expenditures. Part 3 provides
information on births, miscarriages, deaths, the number of live
births from unwed mothers, the number of married couples, and the
number of persons emigrating overseas and to the United States in
1868, 1875, 1891 to 1895, 1896 to 1900, and 1901 to 1905. Part 4
provides information on inter-communal communication and
transportation, such as railways and steamships.
Cf.: http://doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR00041.v1
birth ratesicpsrcensus dataicpsrcommunesicpsreducationicpsreducation expendituresicpsremigrationicpsrelection returnsicpsrelectionsicpsrelectoral censusicpsrenrollmentsicpsrhouseholdsicpsrincome distributionicpsrmortality ratesicpsrnineteenth centuryicpsroccupationsicpsrpolitical participationicpsrpolitical attitudesicpsrparliamentary electionsicpsrpolitical partiesicpsrpopulationicpsrreligious affiliationicpsrschool age childrenicpsrtaxesicpsrteachersicpsrtransportationicpsrunwed mothersicpsrvotersicpsrvoter turnouticpsrDSDR VI. Population CharacteristicsIDRC VI. Human Dimension of International RelationsICPSR XIV.A.4.b. Mass Political Behavior and Attitudes, Historical and Contemporary Electoral Processes, Merged Electoral and Ecological Data, Nations Other Than the United StatesIDRC III. Electoral Systems and Political BehaviorAarebrot, FrankKuhnle, SteinInter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research.ICPSR (Series)41Access restricted ; authentication may be required:http://doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR00041.v1 nmm 22 4500ICPSR00040MiAaIm f a u cr mn mmmmuuuu150802s1984 miu f a eng d(MiAaI)ICPSR00040MiAaIMiAaI
Norwegian Ecological Data, 1949-1961
[electronic resource]
Frank Aarebrot
,
Stein Kuhnle
1992-02-16Ann Arbor, Mich.Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor]1984ICPSR40NumericTitle from ICPSR DDI metadata of 2015-08-02.AVAILABLE. This study is freely available to ICPSR member institutions.Also available as downloadable files.
This study contains election and census data for 732
Norwegian communes in the period 1949-1961. Election returns
are available for the elections of 1949, 1953, 1957, and 1961.
In addition, data from the censuses of 1950 and 1960 are
presented, including information on demography, education,
modernization, the economy, and occupational structure, and
contextual information about clusters of neighboring communes.
Data are provided on the total number of registered voters and
the total number of votes cast for the Norwegian Communist
Party, the Norwegian Labour Party, the Liberal Party (Venstre),
the Christian People's Party, the Agrarian Party (the Centre Party),
the Conservative Party (Hoyre), and other political parties.
Additional variables provide information on age and educational
levels for males and females, the total number of economically
active population employed in agriculture, forestry, fisheries,
manufacturing, and construction, the total value of industrial
production, and the total number of private households and occupied
housing units.
Cf.: http://doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR00040.v1
agricultureicpsrcensus dataicpsrcommercial districtsicpsrcommunesicpsrdomestic tradeicpsreducationicpsrelection returnsicpsrelectionsicpsremploymenticpsrhouseholdsicpsrhousing unitsicpsrindustryicpsrmodernizationicpsroccupationsicpsrpolitical partiesicpsrpopulation distributionicpsrrural areasicpsrurban areasicpsrurbanizationicpsrIDRC VI. Human Dimension of International RelationsDSDR VI. Population CharacteristicsICPSR XIV.A.4.b. Mass Political Behavior and Attitudes, Historical and Contemporary Electoral Processes, Merged Electoral and Ecological Data, Nations Other Than the United StatesIDRC III. Electoral Systems and Political BehaviorAarebrot, FrankKuhnle, SteinInter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research.ICPSR (Series)40Access restricted ; authentication may be required:http://doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR00040.v1